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BIBLIOGEAPHY OF TRIBES OF TIERRA DEL FUEGO 



67 



Andersson, Johan Gunnar, Nordenskjold, 



Otto and others 



Antarctica: or Two years amongst the 

 ice of the south pole, London-New 

 York, 1905. 



Chapters 4 and 5 of part 2 (pp. 366-91), from 

 the pen of Dr. Andersson, contain passim a good 

 deal of valuable material on some phases of the 

 psychical culture of the Onas, among whom he 

 spent more than a month in Sept.-Oct., 1902. 

 The author made a journey afoot with Ona 

 guides from Harberton to Lake Fagnano and 

 return. 



Andree, Richard 



Die Anthropophagie, Leipzig, 1887. 



On p. 90 are given the views of Fitz-Roy, 

 Darwin, Snow, Marguin, and Hyadcs on the 

 question of Fuegian cannibaUsm. 



Angelis, Pedro de, ed. 



Coleccion de obras y documentos 

 relativos a la historia antigua y moderna 

 de las provincias del Rio de la Plata, 

 6 vols., Buenos Aires, 1836-37. 



Vol. 1 contains a Spanish translation of 

 Falkner's Description of Patagonia. 



Anrique R., Nicolas and Silva A., L. 



Iguacio 



Eusayo de una bibliografia historica y 

 jeografica de Chile, Santiago de Chile, 

 1902. 



Contains 2,561 titles of books and articles, of 

 which a good proportion are of anthropological 

 interest, in the chief modern languages; annota- 

 tions or criticisms are exceptional. There are 

 some inaccuracies, but relatively few, consider- 

 ing the short time, only 66 days, at the disposal 

 of the compilers. The list includes many refer- 

 ences not found in other bibliographies of Chile. 



Anson, George, Lord. 1741 

 See Richard Walter, Pascoe Thomas. 



Anuario de la prensa chilena, publicado 



por la Biblioteca nacional, Santiago 



de Chile, annually since 1886. 



Gives lists of the books deposited in the library 



under the law of 1872, and from 1891 includes 



books by Chilean authors or relating to Chile 



published in other countries. Not annotated. 



Anuario hidrogrSfico de la marina de 

 Chile, Santiago- Valparaiso, 1875- 

 1912, vols, i-xxviii. 



Contains the following early and modem 

 original narratives or translations thereof bearing 

 on Fuegian and Chonoan anthropology: E. 

 Simpson, Juliet, 1875, vol. i; Goicueta, UUoa, 

 Ibar S., J. M. Simpson and Chaigneau, a, 1879, 

 vol. v; Ulloa, Pretty, o, tr., Ladrillero, J. M. 

 Simpson and Chaigneau, b, Serrano M., a, 1880, 



Anuario hidrografico — Continued 



vol. vi; Mori, Sarmiento, 1881, vol. vn; B. Gal- 

 lardo, de Vea, Serrano M., 6, Hyades, g, tr., 1886, 

 vol. xi; Moraleda, 1887-8, vols, xn-xra; Machado, 

 Garcia, a, d'Arquistade, tr.. Martial, tr., 1889, 

 vol. XIV ; Brouwer, tr., 1892, vol. xvi; Gajardo, 

 1905, vol. xxv; Pacheco, a, 1907, vol. xxvi; 

 WTiiteside, 1912, vol. xxvn; Morales, Pacheco, 

 6, 1912, vol. xxvin. 



A great deal of the above material is not 



. available elsewhere. The Anuario also contains 



passim many valuable maps, and considerable 



first-hand information on fauna, flora, climate, 



geology, and geography. 



Arctowski, Henryk 



Voyage d' exploration dans la region 

 des canaux de la Terre de Feu. (In 

 Bull. Soc. Toy. beige de geogr., Bruxelles, 

 1901, xxv, 33-62; reprint, ibid., 1902.) 



Dr. Arctowski spent a little more than a 

 month in Fuegia in 1897-98 as geologist and me- 

 teorologist of the Belgica expedition, 1897-1899. 

 His article is chiefly of value for the Ona vocabu- 

 lary (pp. 61-62) of 139 words, phrases, and sen- 

 tences, gathered at Dawson Island with the aid 

 of one of the Salesian missionaries from a young 

 Ona boy who understood Spanish, and who had 

 been to Europe. 



Argensola, Bartolom6 Leonardo de 



Conqvista de las islas Malvcas, Ma- 

 drid, 1609; Fr. tr., 3 vols., Amsterdam, 

 1706; Engl. tr. in Stevens, vol. i; nar- 

 rative of Sarmiento's voyage quoted in 

 full in Iriarte's ed. of orig. jour., pp. 

 xxxix-lviii, and surnmarized in de 

 Brosses, i, 199-219, and in Laet, bk. 12, 

 Lat. and Fr. tr., bk. 13. 



Argensola gives (bk. 3, pp. 109-26) a long 

 account of Sarmiento's voyage in 1579-80. This 

 abstract contains approximately the same an- 

 thropological data as does the original journal, 

 but toward the end relates a few fabulous details 

 not found in the latter. 



Arquistade, Joapchin d' 



Breve et demontree relation de la 

 nouvelle decouverte d'un grand en- 

 foncement ou baye en la coste occi- 

 dentale de la Terre-de-Feu . . . vo- 

 yage aus annees 1714, 15, 16 et 17 . . . 

 navire le Sainct-Frangois . . . (In 

 Martial, Mission du cap Horn, i, 266-269 ; 

 extr. in Hyades, l, pp. 723-725; Span. tr. 

 in An. hidr. mar. Chile, Santiago, 1889, 

 XIV, 534-537.) 



Next to L'Hermite's, the earliest account we 

 possess of the Yahgans. D'Arquistade's brief 

 description of their customs and material culture 

 is based on personal obser\'ation during one day 

 spent with the natives at Orange Bay in 1715. 



